State of Iowa:Economy and Budget Update (Powerpoint file)
... State Responses So Far • Fund balances: drawn down from more than 10% of expenditures in FY 2001 to 1.3% of expenditures at end of FY 2003; 16 states now have balances of <1% • Special funds: At least 23 states tapped capital, highway, other funds for FY 2003, and 29 for FY 2004; at least 16 have u ...
... State Responses So Far • Fund balances: drawn down from more than 10% of expenditures in FY 2001 to 1.3% of expenditures at end of FY 2003; 16 states now have balances of <1% • Special funds: At least 23 states tapped capital, highway, other funds for FY 2003, and 29 for FY 2004; at least 16 have u ...
Chapter 7: Introduction to Business Cycles
... "short run" analyses and that the analysis of chapter 6 (and 5, and 4) are "long run" analyses. In the short run prices are sticky, and so shifts in policy or the environment that affect the total flow of nominal spending affect the level of output (but not the level of prices)--in the short run. In ...
... "short run" analyses and that the analysis of chapter 6 (and 5, and 4) are "long run" analyses. In the short run prices are sticky, and so shifts in policy or the environment that affect the total flow of nominal spending affect the level of output (but not the level of prices)--in the short run. In ...
Fiscal Policy - McGraw Hill Higher Education
... Counter-Cyclical Fiscal Policy (III) •Dealing with an inflationary gap by means of fiscal policy, i.e., by lowering G and/or raising T. •The gap is equal to Y1 minus YFE. ...
... Counter-Cyclical Fiscal Policy (III) •Dealing with an inflationary gap by means of fiscal policy, i.e., by lowering G and/or raising T. •The gap is equal to Y1 minus YFE. ...
Fiscal Policy in an Unemployment Crisis
... Sims (2012). These authors assess the impact of government spending on output through a mechanism of consumer “confidence”, which is strongly predictive of future fundamentals (c.f. Barsky and Sims (2012)).9 Following the methodology developed in Auerbach and Gorodnichenko (2012), Bachmann and Sims ...
... Sims (2012). These authors assess the impact of government spending on output through a mechanism of consumer “confidence”, which is strongly predictive of future fundamentals (c.f. Barsky and Sims (2012)).9 Following the methodology developed in Auerbach and Gorodnichenko (2012), Bachmann and Sims ...
Appendix C. Economic Freedom Index: Subcomponents and
... spending, such as providing infrastructure or funding research or even improvements in human capital, may be thought of as investments. There are public goods, the benefits of which accrue broadly to society in ways that markets cannot appropriately price. All ...
... spending, such as providing infrastructure or funding research or even improvements in human capital, may be thought of as investments. There are public goods, the benefits of which accrue broadly to society in ways that markets cannot appropriately price. All ...
The consumption function
... The slope of the C function equals the marginal propensity to consume. For the straight-line C function in (a), the slope is the same at all levels of income and is given by the change in consumption divided by the change in disposable income that causes it: MPC=4/5. ...
... The slope of the C function equals the marginal propensity to consume. For the straight-line C function in (a), the slope is the same at all levels of income and is given by the change in consumption divided by the change in disposable income that causes it: MPC=4/5. ...
small open economies
... A commodity boom stretches the Production Possibility Frontier rightward (H): can now afford to buy more TGs. TB>0 => real apprec. The new LR equilibrium point, E', (external balance & internal balance) now implies a higher relative price of NTGs, inducing land & labor to move out of non-commodity T ...
... A commodity boom stretches the Production Possibility Frontier rightward (H): can now afford to buy more TGs. TB>0 => real apprec. The new LR equilibrium point, E', (external balance & internal balance) now implies a higher relative price of NTGs, inducing land & labor to move out of non-commodity T ...
Principles of Microeconomics
... Course Objective: The goal of ECON 2105 is to develop a framework which the student may use to analyze the overall behavior of a modern mixed capitalist economy and its international interactions. This framework introduces the student to the economic way of thinking about the macro-level forces at w ...
... Course Objective: The goal of ECON 2105 is to develop a framework which the student may use to analyze the overall behavior of a modern mixed capitalist economy and its international interactions. This framework introduces the student to the economic way of thinking about the macro-level forces at w ...
(missing) Chapter 20: Great Depression and European Unemployment
... END OF GREAT DEPRESSION: WORLD WAR II (Massive fiscal stimulus: deficit in 1942-3 was 30 percent of GDP) ...
... END OF GREAT DEPRESSION: WORLD WAR II (Massive fiscal stimulus: deficit in 1942-3 was 30 percent of GDP) ...
Chapter 8 review -answers in bold Suppose an economy`s real GDP
... Both resource quantity and resource productivity contribute significantly to increased economic growth in the United States. About a third of the increase in economic growth comes from increases in resource input and about two-thirds from increases in resource productivity. Clearly, it is not the qu ...
... Both resource quantity and resource productivity contribute significantly to increased economic growth in the United States. About a third of the increase in economic growth comes from increases in resource input and about two-thirds from increases in resource productivity. Clearly, it is not the qu ...
Economics Web Newsletter - McGraw Hill Higher Education
... three or four contracts where the customer is also reluctant to commit because "business isn't where it should be." Businesses are also keeping a tight rein on hiring. Unemployment insurance rolls remain high. Help-wanted advertising fell in March. Automated Packaging Systems Inc., a Streetsboro, O ...
... three or four contracts where the customer is also reluctant to commit because "business isn't where it should be." Businesses are also keeping a tight rein on hiring. Unemployment insurance rolls remain high. Help-wanted advertising fell in March. Automated Packaging Systems Inc., a Streetsboro, O ...
Appendices - Harvard Kennedy School
... Another respect in which many EMs have improved their policies since the crises of the late-1990s: A shift from pro-cyclical fiscal policy to counter-cyclical ...
... Another respect in which many EMs have improved their policies since the crises of the late-1990s: A shift from pro-cyclical fiscal policy to counter-cyclical ...
Chapter 18 Practice Quiz
... 6. Which of the following changes produces an upward shift in the consumption function? a. An increase in consumer wealth b. A decrease in consumer wealth c. A decrease in autonomous consumption d. Both (b) and (c) ANS: a. An increase in wealth makes consumers feel more financially secure and they s ...
... 6. Which of the following changes produces an upward shift in the consumption function? a. An increase in consumer wealth b. A decrease in consumer wealth c. A decrease in autonomous consumption d. Both (b) and (c) ANS: a. An increase in wealth makes consumers feel more financially secure and they s ...
Chapter 18 Practice Quiz
... 6. Which of the following changes produces an upward shift in the consumption function? a. An increase in consumer wealth b. A decrease in consumer wealth c. A decrease in autonomous consumption d. Both (b) and (c) ANS: a. An increase in wealth makes consumers feel more financially secure and they s ...
... 6. Which of the following changes produces an upward shift in the consumption function? a. An increase in consumer wealth b. A decrease in consumer wealth c. A decrease in autonomous consumption d. Both (b) and (c) ANS: a. An increase in wealth makes consumers feel more financially secure and they s ...
Chapter 24 The Keynesian Framework Chapter 25 The IS-LM World
... Focus on aggregate spending as the variable that must be adjusted through adjusting interest rates: ie. Excessive inflation--Keynesians see it as excessive spending (demand-pull inflation) so they would manipulate money supply to raise interest rates to decrease spending ...
... Focus on aggregate spending as the variable that must be adjusted through adjusting interest rates: ie. Excessive inflation--Keynesians see it as excessive spending (demand-pull inflation) so they would manipulate money supply to raise interest rates to decrease spending ...
Adam Czerniak, Ph.D. Department of Economics II - E-SGH
... Calculate the multiplier for this economy. What would be the equilibrium level of income? Draw a diagram presenting graphs of consumption function, aggregate demand function and 45° line. Mark the equilibrium. H. What would be the impact of the increase in investment of 100? Show the new equilibrium ...
... Calculate the multiplier for this economy. What would be the equilibrium level of income? Draw a diagram presenting graphs of consumption function, aggregate demand function and 45° line. Mark the equilibrium. H. What would be the impact of the increase in investment of 100? Show the new equilibrium ...
Presentation
... • The collapse in housing and finance led the economy down. • The budget, already in bad shape, was hurt by the downturn and the stimulus, and faces medium- and long-term problems. • Proposals to address the economy, housing, finance, and the budget are intertwined and aggressive, but may not work. ...
... • The collapse in housing and finance led the economy down. • The budget, already in bad shape, was hurt by the downturn and the stimulus, and faces medium- and long-term problems. • Proposals to address the economy, housing, finance, and the budget are intertwined and aggressive, but may not work. ...
AP Macro Study Guide - Phoenix Union High School District
... financing a deficit. The government can enter the money market and borrow, competing with private business borrowers for funds. This might cause a crowdingout effect, “taking up” some space for investment spending and consumer spending. The crowding-out effect reduces the expansionary impact of the ...
... financing a deficit. The government can enter the money market and borrow, competing with private business borrowers for funds. This might cause a crowdingout effect, “taking up” some space for investment spending and consumer spending. The crowding-out effect reduces the expansionary impact of the ...
ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS Economic Factor - Volterra-Elia
... The elements needed for economic evaluation of an investment are: • The return required by the project or the opportunity cost of capital. • The economic life of the project, ie the number of years that are expected to spend between the initial outlay and the time at which the investment will make t ...
... The elements needed for economic evaluation of an investment are: • The return required by the project or the opportunity cost of capital. • The economic life of the project, ie the number of years that are expected to spend between the initial outlay and the time at which the investment will make t ...
FedViews
... A strengthening labor market is a crucial underpinning for developing a strong, self-sustaining economic recovery. The March jobs report posted a healthy payroll employment gain of 192,000. Clearly, the job market has shrugged off the adverse effects of the winter weather. Averaging over the past si ...
... A strengthening labor market is a crucial underpinning for developing a strong, self-sustaining economic recovery. The March jobs report posted a healthy payroll employment gain of 192,000. Clearly, the job market has shrugged off the adverse effects of the winter weather. Averaging over the past si ...
Problem Set 11
... (E) None of above. (Answer: (B)) 6. The demand for real money will be more sensitive to the interest rate, (A) The more people care about the timing of investment. (B) The less people care about the timing of investment. (C) The less substitutable other financial assets are for money. (D) The less s ...
... (E) None of above. (Answer: (B)) 6. The demand for real money will be more sensitive to the interest rate, (A) The more people care about the timing of investment. (B) The less people care about the timing of investment. (C) The less substitutable other financial assets are for money. (D) The less s ...